10,744 JFK RECORDS WERE RELEASED TODAY BY OR THROUGH THE NATIONAL ARCHIVES.

ALL OF THE DOCUMENTS RELEASED TODAY ARE FROM THE FBI.(11.17.2017, BB.)

Washington, DC

In the fifth public release this year, the National Archives today posted 10,744 records subject to the President John F. Kennedy Assassination Records Collection Act of 1992 (JFK Act).

All of the documents released today are from the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI). Of the documents released today, 8,336 documents are released in their entirety and 2,408 are released with limited redactions. Also, this is the first release for 144 of the documents. Released records are available for download.

The versions released today were processed by the FBI and, in accordance with the President’s guidance, are being posted expeditiously in order to make the documents available to the public, even before the March deadline established by the President on Oct. 26, 2017. Any information that has been redacted from the records in this public release remains subject to further review by the FBI and the National Archives in accordance with the President’s direction.

The National Archives released 13,213 documents on Nov. 9, 676 documents on Nov. 3, 2,891 documents on Oct. 26, and 3,810 records on July 24.

The National Archives established the John F. Kennedy Assassination Records Collection in November 1992, and it consists of approximately five million pages of records. The vast majority of the collection has been publicly available without any restrictions since the late 1990s.

As always, I strongly recommend that you first read, research, and study material completely yourself about a Subject Matter, and then formulate your own Opinions and Theories.

Any additional analyses, interviews, investigations, readings, research, studies, thoughts, or writings on any aspect of this Subject Matter ?

Bear in mind that we are trying to attract and educate a Whole New Generation of JFK Researchers who may not be as well versed as you.

Jim DiEugenio appeared on Coast To Coast Am 11/18/17 to discuss the JFK Files. In the second hour Thomas Colbert discusses the D.B. Cooper hijacking case from 11/24/71. He nails it in my opinion and names the man who is still alive today!

Which raises questions about why the reluctance to release what they have left? What would have happened if Trump demanded they all be released immediately? He put a Congressman into the CIA position who wants to continue the cover--up.